The New Zealand dollar rose against the euro after German manufacturing and euro-zone services weakened and edged up against the greenback ahead of the reserve Bank's interest rate review.
The kiwi dollar rose to 64.61 euro cents from 64.33 cents at 5pm in Wellington yesterday. It gained to 84.04 US cents from 83.94 cents.
A survey of purchasing managers in the services and manufacturing industries in the euro-zone was at 46.5 this month, signalling contraction, while Germany's PMI fell to 47.9 from 49 on a scale where 50 marks the line between contraction and expansion.
At home, Reserve Bank Governor Graeme Wheeler is expected to keep the official cash rate unchanged at 2.5 per cent this morning, while making reference to the strong kiwi dollar and the heat in the housing market.
"It would not be a surprise to see the 'strong' NZD to be given some ink in the statement," said Kymberly Martin, market strategist at Bank of New Zealand. "The market prices the RBNZ being 'on hold' well into next year. The market would therefore need to start pricing rate cuts if yields are to fall from current levels, and thereby undermine the NZD's interest rate differential support."